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Defense of the Philippines, 1941 (World War II Documentary) 

Army University Press
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On 8 December 1941, Imperial Japanese bombers and fighters launched an unprovoked attack on U.S. airfields in the Philippines. Simultaneously, Japanese infantry landed at several key beaches on the main island of Luzon. This was but the first phase of Japan’s plan to seize the Philippines and use its strategic harbors as intermediate staging bases for further aggression in the South Pacific. However, General Douglas MacArthur and the U.S. and Filipino forces on the islands had prepared as best they could for just such an event. Over the next few weeks, they mounted a determined defense in an effort to turn back the Japanese forces and upset their plans for further conquest.
This film, the first in the Philippines film series, covers the first weeks of Imperial Japan's invasion and General MacArthur's eventual application of War Plan Orange in late December 1941.
Chapters:
Introduction - 1:05
Rising Storm - 1:32
Preparing for the Future - 4:44
Operational Plans - 9:58
Preparing the Defense - 11:59
Enemy Forces - 18:20
8 December 1941 - 21:02
9-19 December 1941 - 23:28
22 December 1941 - 25:44
23 December 1941 - 31:02
24 December 1941 - 36:21
Doctrine:
Delay (ADP 3-90) - 4:30
Indications and Warnings - 7:54
Joint Planning (JP 5-0) - 9:04
Taking advantage of terrain - 11:19
Rearward Passage of Lines - 31:25
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19 ноя 2020

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Комментарии : 1,9 тыс.   
@ArmyUniversityPress
@ArmyUniversityPress 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for watching! Please don't forget to like and subscribe. To view more of our films, check out our full collection at www.armyupress.army.mil/Films/Feature-Film-Catalog/
@krystalmae5557
@krystalmae5557 7 месяцев назад
WOW IM FIRST, HI AFTER 3 YEARS 😊
@haideeubas3377
@haideeubas3377 6 месяцев назад
@@krystalmae5557same
@arnelavila1973
@arnelavila1973 3 года назад
My grandmother often told us her experience during the war, the horrors of killing makes her cried, she remembered Japanese killed her relatives infront of her eyes. That time she was 4 months pregnant to my father. Luckily it was end of war when she gave birth to my father in 1942. If not we may not be here today. A million thanks to my grandparents who are now in heaven.
@2000ViperGTSsubscribe
@2000ViperGTSsubscribe 3 года назад
Salamat po from America for sharing that. I'm an American, former US Navy, butI like WWII history and been to PH too.
@AlvinREDDELTA
@AlvinREDDELTA 3 года назад
least we forget
@calvzkeith
@calvzkeith 3 года назад
What do you mean? World war 2 did not end in 1942.
@Keonn.
@Keonn. 3 года назад
@@tanyeweestudent6856 Sh4dap
@PrinceChaloner
@PrinceChaloner 3 года назад
@@tanyeweestudent6856 Commie....
@gggamer2738
@gggamer2738 3 года назад
Man we need to update our history classes. I'm a Filipino history buff so this is much appreciated
@lancegigs9022
@lancegigs9022 3 года назад
yes tama ka dyan.... daming kulang. lalo na sa High Schoo curriculum. daming detalye na namiss out
@ChristianJade6629
@ChristianJade6629 3 года назад
Tangina boi kung ww2 paguusapan 1sf hanggang 2nd grading yan matatapos
@pongangelo2048
@pongangelo2048 3 года назад
@@lancegigs9022 edsa revolution yung mas pinaprayoridad ng Philippine History dito sa amin.
@felipeball7778
@felipeball7778 3 года назад
Puro tungkol sa panahon ng mga spanyol
@ChristianJade6629
@ChristianJade6629 3 года назад
@@felipeball7778 importante kasi dahil sa panahon ng espanyol Ang pagkagawa ng ating bansa
@saruman9226
@saruman9226 3 года назад
My grandfather was around 17 years old when the war broke. He served as a member of the scouting party during the war. After the war ended, he was invited to go to the US to be enlisted as an official US army, but he decided to stay...and here I am today. I was lucky to be able to see him in person. But he passed away at the age of 89.
@zes3813
@zes3813 3 года назад
wrrgg
@anormalperson1188
@anormalperson1188 3 года назад
@@zes3813 did you stroked?
@jamesanthon4749
@jamesanthon4749 2 года назад
Kawawa naman yung lolo mo boss
@michaelfrio1625
@michaelfrio1625 2 года назад
my pop was born 1945..and japanese faces were born on neighborhood as I observed now
@rin-er2db
@rin-er2db 2 года назад
omg aldrin??? hahaha
@NewDealChief
@NewDealChief 3 года назад
I'm a Filipino, all of my Great-Grandparents experienced WW2 and all have passed away. I haven't been able to ask them about their experiences, but as a History Buff this documentary about the Defense of the Philippines is a great learning experience for me.
@bayanimockingjay
@bayanimockingjay 3 года назад
Same, I wish they were still alive for me to ask them.
@limuelmagbanua3137
@limuelmagbanua3137 3 года назад
I ask my grandfather and he said as he was a kid he always ask chocolate to the Americans but when japanese attack they hide in the tunnels and don't laugh or make a sound and bomber planes is being heard above the tunnels my grand father is 90+ years old i always ask for that
@JustTheFlecks
@JustTheFlecks 3 года назад
Check out the movie “The Great Raid” (2005) if you haven’t already. I rented it on Prime Video - that’s the only place I could find it. But we’ll worth the $4 rental fee.
@JustTheFlecks
@JustTheFlecks 3 года назад
@KAZU the young are not responsible for the sins of those that come before them... they are only responsible to learn about mistakes and keep it from happening again.
@NewDealChief
@NewDealChief 3 года назад
@@JustTheFlecks Just searched it, thanks for the sugestion
@mahdisulaiman3829
@mahdisulaiman3829 3 года назад
A grand salute To the men and women who fought bravely to free the Philippines 🇵🇭
@Mike_Oxlong420
@Mike_Oxlong420 3 года назад
🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭Pinoy ako🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
@valueangles
@valueangles 3 года назад
Today, calld Day of Valor, rmembers those who fought bravely to DEFEND th Phil., NOT to FREE th Phil. It used to be calld Fall of Bataan, or Bataan Day. It sounded like celebration of DEFEAT, SO it was renamed Day of Valor.
@zhangzhehanphtvwelcomeback7778
@zhangzhehanphtvwelcomeback7778 2 года назад
😭😭😭😭😭👊👊👊👊
@lanalane6838
@lanalane6838 2 года назад
They were all 98% percent Americans. America is our only hope then and now.
@nayrvitale3823
@nayrvitale3823 10 месяцев назад
​@@lanalane6838😂😂😂😂
@garymorton7922
@garymorton7922 3 года назад
Later when MacArthur returned he brought my 19 year old father with him. Dad trained at Fort Bliss, TX and was a proud member of the 1st Cav Division. My father was with the fellow soldiers who re took Luzon Island and Manila the capitol.
@pag-asaiifausto42
@pag-asaiifausto42 3 года назад
From a grateful country, thank you for the courage and sacrifice of your dad.
@averagecommenter3006
@averagecommenter3006 3 года назад
With outyour dad i could be dead right now thank u
@garymorton7922
@garymorton7922 3 года назад
@@averagecommenter3006 Thank you for your kindness, He made many comments about how wonderful the Phillipino people were and how brave their soldiers were.
@JustTheFlecks
@JustTheFlecks 3 года назад
It’s too bad it took MacArthur 3 years to get back to the Philippines. He left 75,000 American and Filipino military behind when he left. All of them were captured by the Japanese. Thousands of US and Filipino soldiers died over those 3 years - my great uncle included (a B-17 bomber, his plane was destroyed on the ground when Japanese attacked due to MacArthur’s unpreparedness). After the Bataan Death March and POW camp, my uncle was forced with others to do slave labor in a Japanese coal mine. He lasted until April, 1945, when he was injured in an accident in the mine and nobody would treat his wounds. He was very close to getting liberated. FDR and MacArthur completely underestimated the resolve and viciousness of the Japanese. Less than 2% of POW’s in Nazi POW camps died... in Japanese POW camps, over 40% died! The Japanese Imperial Army committed atrocities that rivaled the Nazi’s, but unlike Nazi’s they’ll never surrender. They would fight to the death down to the last man. Obviously I have the advantage of hindsight, but I’ll never understand why FDR allowed 75,000 soldiers to be taken hostage by an enemy nation without immediate reprisals... but again, I’m saying this with the benefit of hindsight.
@lancegigs9022
@lancegigs9022 3 года назад
@@JustTheFlecks so what is your point?
@cmleoj
@cmleoj 3 года назад
My neighbor was a US soldier in the Philippines, captured and sent on the Bataan Death March. When the war was over, he gave an interview to Life Magazine about his experiences and the paid him a few thousand dollars, big money back then. He took the money and bought lumber to build a house. Lived there the rest of his life. He was a good guy with a level head on his shoulders. Respect.
@afifahashmi8987
@afifahashmi8987 Год назад
Can I ask something Sir About the benefits they got from US I THINK SOMEONE CHEAT US ABOUT THIS MATTER IT IS POSSIBLE THST MY MOTHER CANNOT GET HER PENSION FROM US WE. RECEIVE ONLY ONE TIME THAT WAS 2005 And no more
@migueldelacruz5054
@migueldelacruz5054 3 года назад
Thanks for this. My grandpa and my grandma's brothers fought in the 2nd world war and only my grandpa went home. People back then were very patriotic and are ready to fight for our country. I tip my hat to them. More power to your team! Thanks for creating a good documentary.
@edriantito6703
@edriantito6703 3 года назад
Same here! NLT-engineering division.
@chiefweez5426
@chiefweez5426 3 года назад
My grandfather was part of Filipino Division under US Army(USAFFE) in ww2. My grandfather was Technical Sergeant and rifleman that time and escaped Bataan Death March and fought until Korean War. Im proud of my grandfather🇵🇭
@isislikesyou8605
@isislikesyou8605 2 года назад
Why my Grandfather's story is same with you of Serving in the US army, survives Bataan death march (gets a nickname of Bataan boys), Serve also in the Korean war but also in the famous battle of Yultong
@zhangzhehanphtvwelcomeback7778
@zhangzhehanphtvwelcomeback7778 2 года назад
OMG!😭😭😭😭😭👊👊👊my family gave a glimpse story about this to over the sad moment. So I'm always seeking information to know the story. And here I am. Crying and the sametime very proud for the brave soldiers who fought to give a victory and peace in our country.
@lanalane6838
@lanalane6838 2 года назад
be proud most of the American soldiers. Wag mong kalimutan yan. Sila ang tumulong sa atin. Sila ang nagtrain sa lolo mo para matuto na maging sundalo ganun din sa lolo ko. Wag kalimutan ang kauna-unahang dapat pasalamatan. Hindi ang pilipino kundi America.
@user-ed8wc1yr8s
@user-ed8wc1yr8s Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1js16n6IwY4.html リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。 The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world. America is, Concentration camp for Japanese immigrants robbed and confiscated property same as nazi
@fawn_the_fairy5721
@fawn_the_fairy5721 5 месяцев назад
@@lanalane6838LOL
@thelameg6
@thelameg6 Год назад
my girlfriend is Filipino, the heart that this island nation had is still strong to day. you deserve the best lives, free from our or other influences. im no religious, but i pray for you guys. the liberation of your great nation will never be forgotten, Filipinos demonstrated the true nature of Bayanihan in those fateful days in the 1940s. Mabuhay Pilipinas!!
@stang3787
@stang3787 3 года назад
The 26th cavalry was a Philippine Scout unit that had the distinction of being the last US Cavalry Horse unit to have a mounted charge.
@jerryc2709
@jerryc2709 3 года назад
And sadly, they had to kill and eat their horses to ward off starvation.
@stang3787
@stang3787 3 года назад
@@jerryc2709 When asked after the war if horses were useful in the defense of the Philippines a Medal of Honor winner from that unit said "yes, we ate them".
@arielcuenca5037
@arielcuenca5037 3 года назад
Lt Edwin Ramsey of the 26th Cavalry Regiment led the last mounted horse attack in history @ Morong,Bataan Jan 1942,they'd annihilated the Japanese🇵🇭🇺🇸
@RD-kq3ml
@RD-kq3ml 3 года назад
@@stang3787 Well, if you hear what the CCP propaganda machine shouting nowadays, it'll give you a hint. They(CCP) are saying that Asia is for asians, ironically repeating what Imperial Japan is saying during WW2. Strategically speaking, it kinda make sense also to control a country(Philippines) that is a gateway of Asia and literally a "crossroad" according to Sun Tzu's teachings...if ya' look at the map.
@stang3787
@stang3787 3 года назад
@@RD-kq3ml Be sure to check out the PS four parter at ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-aLb9PztKVVQ.html
@PrinceChaloner
@PrinceChaloner 3 года назад
My grandfather and great grandfather was in the Philippines. My grandfather was in the military when the Japanese invaded. Instead of surrendering like everyone else he and my great grandfather hid in the mountains of Mindanao and started a Guerrilla units and my grandfather became head of intelligence and helped General MacArthur where to land in the invasion. Once General MacArthur arrived my grandfather transferred to the 6th Infantry division and was promoted to Major.. 😎
@anticommunist5851
@anticommunist5851 3 года назад
Based and guerrilla-pilled.
@platinumencasedpenile4812
@platinumencasedpenile4812 Год назад
My grandpa was there as army air corp. Neat bro
@sgtbr2564
@sgtbr2564 Год назад
@@platinumencasedpenile4812 * Air Corp
@WalterWhiteFootballSharing
@WalterWhiteFootballSharing 11 месяцев назад
All Guerillas are Based. By definition, you're fighting legit occupation armed forces with artillery and heavy weapons you don't have. You're usually doomed to die but more spring up from your village in outrage to revenge your death.
@platinumencasedpenile4812
@platinumencasedpenile4812 11 месяцев назад
@@sgtbr2564 thx
@jomelmenes7192
@jomelmenes7192 3 года назад
It was the most devastating war my grandfather was a cook during that time for the Filipino soldiers,my grandmother's brother fought in the war, they went on mountains to hide dig a hole for safety it was hard time I feel sad the grief and hardship.now it was peaceful 50's to 20's but this days a huge,powerful country wants to engage and envade again trying to expand their territories.
@rcgunner7086
@rcgunner7086 3 года назад
IDK if China has territorial claims on the Philippine Islands themselves, but they sure want your nation's claims to the seafloor in the South China Sea. Apparently it's rich in resources that they want to fuel their economy- the Philippines be damned. Good luck with that and with the incoming US administration helping.
@JustTheFlecks
@JustTheFlecks 3 года назад
Yes... China wants the Philippines in a bad way.
@fringeelements
@fringeelements 3 года назад
Well if that happens, hopefully the US doesn't make the same mistake and doesn't get involved.
@germanfisch
@germanfisch 3 года назад
@@fringeelements doesn't get involved? So you're saying if China wants to invade the Philippines you want the US and all of its many allies to do nothing
@fringeelements
@fringeelements 3 года назад
@@germanfisch - Correct. Not our problem, and it wouldn't strengthen China.
@firemangan2731
@firemangan2731 3 года назад
My Great Grandmother was only 13 when the Japanese invaded the Philippines in December 8, my grand mother (My Great grandmother’s doughter) told me the family hid somewhere in the forests of Mindanao and one of them would go outside to get food obviously. My great great grandfather, an American farmer who moved to the Philippines, helped supplying food to American and Filipino resistance groups, some relatives even joined the resistance but unfortunately all of them were killed. My great grandmother is currently 92, sadly shes the last surviving member in the family who went through WW2 as her 79 year old sister passed away in 2017.
@atty.veronicainoturanosg3487
@atty.veronicainoturanosg3487 3 года назад
THANK YOU for uploading this
@ronchristiantenala4056
@ronchristiantenala4056 3 года назад
So glad finally a documentary covering the early days of the defense of the Philippines was made, so far I only have watched the Legacy of Heroes which was focused on the defense of Bataan and Corregidor as well as japanese atrocities after the USAFFE's. Surrendered.
@pzg_kami6472
@pzg_kami6472 3 года назад
Very good video documentary and I especially liked the Order of Battles of each sides and their Organization ,that is absent in many other documentaries
@meshparrenas4285
@meshparrenas4285 3 года назад
Wow!😃😃😃 this is the only video that i have seen so many old videos for the first time! Great work!😍😍😍😍
@garamstan.7310
@garamstan.7310 Месяц назад
2024?? anyone?
@theexotic4598
@theexotic4598 26 дней назад
Still here heheheh
@bbrrr-yd8ky
@bbrrr-yd8ky 21 день назад
here🎉
@shelcllmr
@shelcllmr 19 дней назад
yes
@user-ih4pc2ch3d
@user-ih4pc2ch3d 16 дней назад
Here
@Drift_Rookie
@Drift_Rookie 2 дня назад
Here mate
@caelestigladii
@caelestigladii 3 года назад
This has to the the most meticulous video documentary on this subject and the quality is also above par. The organizational charts are most impressive. Keep it up.
@thekhans2823
@thekhans2823 3 года назад
Yes, oh and good profile pic
@TheMaster4534
@TheMaster4534 3 года назад
The whole documentary is WRONG. They didnt mention most of the Anti-Japanese Resistance in the Philippines were led by the Communist Party and a few warlords who later become the traditional politicians of the independent postwar republic.
@caelestigladii
@caelestigladii 3 года назад
@@TheMaster4534 So what you're saying is that its mostly the communist party and traditional politicians who have the courage to fight for freedom?
@fildelara279
@fildelara279 3 года назад
Uuuuh. This was the EARLY defense of the Philippines.
@osamabinladen824
@osamabinladen824 3 года назад
@@TheMaster4534 Exactly.
@zhcr1146
@zhcr1146 3 года назад
Man were really going down from japan without america.big thank you AMERICA from philliphines 💙
@jjwakwak8540
@jjwakwak8540 2 года назад
Well this is not the whole truth... america basically living lavish life while in manila and bomb the city when they left.
@justinepanes366
@justinepanes366 2 года назад
actually, Americans didn't help the Philippines during that day it seems like American help Philippines cuz they were there and to make it clear (American were in the Philippines and doing some stuff so Americans occupy the Philippines then Japanese invades too they go there and Japanese meets American troops and they fight it is just like for example: American was eating in a plate and Japanese invades and eat the food that was in the plate so what will the American would do of course to fight, Americans wont let another country invades their occupiciation and it was just a good thing that American didn't really colonize or do something to conquer philippines even though they already at the door and they have an opportunity to steal but they don't that the good thing, that y some pilipinos say Americans helps Philippines during that day:) b careful mate...............
@flahertyrick88
@flahertyrick88 3 года назад
You do amazing work
@WildBillCox13
@WildBillCox13 3 года назад
A wonderful coverage, gladly liked and linked.
@cpgoef6
@cpgoef6 3 года назад
Can't wait to see the second film now!
@fizkallnyeilsem
@fizkallnyeilsem 3 года назад
Ay you released this vid on my birthday, plus my favorite subject for a yt content, WW2 of pacific theatre
@schlirf
@schlirf 3 года назад
Excellent lessons here; one that, I fear, might be applied to any conflict with China.
@still_e3
@still_e3 3 года назад
its a cliché
@alexpeterson849
@alexpeterson849 3 года назад
We don’t fear the Chinese we fear the consequences of “that conflict”. But we’ll beat em that’s for certain.
@iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402
@iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402 3 года назад
@@alexpeterson849 Why is that certain?
@iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402
@iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402 3 года назад
@@alexpeterson849 Oh wait your probably american
@alexpeterson849
@alexpeterson849 3 года назад
@@iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402We have immensely superior air and naval capabilities. China has long range anti ship missiles and a lot of them. However I don’t believe that will be enough to break an American naval blockade. China’s economy will be wrecked as a result. They won’t get the Coal or Iron ore to make steel China has both iron and coal just not enough of it to feed its economy. China doesn’t consume like America does in its economy. China relies on exports. China also won’t be able to get oil either. Logically China won’t be able to supply ground forces overseas for extended periods. Due to this their manpower or manpower myth is redundant. China can’t fight a war on the defensive they can’t afford to. The United States only has to blockade them and prevent them for using their trade routes in the South China Sea.
@arch.l.a.deleon445
@arch.l.a.deleon445 3 года назад
Thanks, after a long while of watching on our own documentaries in WW2, this is more interesting it's detailed, it gives me excitement on each dates as it was narrated I can feel the tension on how the occupation occurs and the victories later....even thought we know the story from the old school days almost 40 yrs ago...it still refreshes me of our rich historical past in WW2.
@stang3787
@stang3787 3 года назад
You appear to have discovered a lot of film footage of the Philippine Army never seen before. Could you do a video on the US Army's Philippine Scouts.There is very limited information on this unit on youtube with a lack of original footage.
@thomascampbell4730
@thomascampbell4730 3 года назад
I was fortunate to find the US Army "Green Book" on the defense of the Philippines and this superb video was a welcome supplement to the text. Time to read it again! Very sad that the gallant defense of the islands is so little known these days. Many lessons to be learned from this presentation. The sacrifices of the Philippine people should not be forgotten nor their courageous resistance after the surrender.
@cydcharisse6863
@cydcharisse6863 2 года назад
Ĺlllllll
@talesoftheamericanempire
@talesoftheamericanempire 3 года назад
This official history leaves our many embarrassing details. The defense of the Philippines was a disaster. See this short video for details: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cG1yLs__mec.html
@carlpablo7918
@carlpablo7918 2 года назад
FIRST OF ALL THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR MAKING THIS AMAZING DOCUMENTARY IM FILIPINO AND I REALLY APPRECIATE THIS DOCUMENTARY THANK YOU SO MUCH SIR❤️
@janalistaireferrer3361
@janalistaireferrer3361 3 года назад
We Need The Next Part
@GoViking933
@GoViking933 3 года назад
A very detailed and meticulous video of the War in the Philippines. Could you please make more, I am most interested in the fighting in the interior of Luzon, namely the details of the Japanese who came through and occupied the Solano/Bayombong/Bambang/Santa Fe/Imugen/Malico area and the drive to push them out from Yamashita Ridge in the battles of Salacsac Pass, Villa Verde Trail & Dalton (Balete) Pass.. There is much great history there to be told :)
@niorjp3224
@niorjp3224 3 года назад
Great vid!!
@sfperalta
@sfperalta 2 года назад
My dad was stationed on Corregidor (59th Coast Artillery, Battery Wheeler) during the invasion. They held out for 6 months before surrendering to the Japanese, and put a big kink in the Japanese timetable. The fact that he survived the battles, and the ensuing 39 months of captivity in Mongolia (Mukden POW camp) is just astounding, the fact of which I owe my own existence, because he got home, married mom and sired us siblings (thanks, dad!). Like many forces stationed in the P.I., he did not have a very good opinion of General McArthur. With historical hindsight, we can see that the entire preparation for war with Japan was not well managed by the US military or the FDR administration, and that, at best, the Philippines defense was only ever going to be a delaying action, as the US was really not ready for full war until possibly 1943. But, as they say, better late then never!
@user-ed8wc1yr8s
@user-ed8wc1yr8s Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1js16n6IwY4.html リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。 The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world. America is, Concentration camp for Japanese immigrants robbed and confiscated property same as nazi
@sfperalta
@sfperalta Год назад
@@user-ed8wc1yr8s No argument that Japanese internment in the US was a despicable policy, based on absolutely no evidence that those interned were in any way a threat to national security. Many of the internees were actually American citizens, making the loss of civil rights and dispossession of property, not to mention the loss of years of their lives especially unforgivable. But to equate this policy with the horror of Nazi concentration camps, slave labor and the wholesale murder of Jews and other populations only serves to diminish the absolute evil of the Holocaust.
@mauavest
@mauavest 6 месяцев назад
😊😊😊😊
@emmanuellopez7356
@emmanuellopez7356 3 года назад
A great documentary indeed. Also, I would recommend the documentary "A Legacy of Heroes: The Story of the Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor" which is available here on RU-vid where you can hear American and Filipino veterans of this particular campaign share the tale in their own words. My late grandfather was a Filipino USAFFE veteran who fought in Bataan, survived the Death March, and was incarcerated in Camp O'Donnell in Tarlac afterwards. He was a 24 year old probationary lieutenant in the Philippine Army back then. He survived the war, got married, and my father was born in 1949.
@Joaquin546
@Joaquin546 3 года назад
Yes I live in New Mexico we had so many veterans from here that was in the bataan death march we even named a school bataan.
@nelsonian
@nelsonian 3 года назад
my wife's uncle was also a Filipino USAFFE vet. He survived but suffered from PTSD after the war. is there a website where we could get more info about the unit he served in?
@Joaquin546
@Joaquin546 3 года назад
@@nelsonian Oh yeah the veterans who came back here were the same.
@KingOfYourMouth
@KingOfYourMouth 2 года назад
Wow di ko alam yan ah. Good to know kuya.
@aspectkraken1076
@aspectkraken1076 3 года назад
Philliphines Very Friendly 😊 🇵🇭❤️🇯🇵
@ajbulan2029
@ajbulan2029 3 года назад
You have a little problem on spelling bud
@imrubbish8182
@imrubbish8182 3 года назад
@@ajbulan2029 you have a little problem knowing that there not English speaking. There japanese
@ajbulan2029
@ajbulan2029 3 года назад
@@imrubbish8182 oh crap my bad
@frogboy7626
@frogboy7626 3 года назад
@@imrubbish8182 Our Country's name wasnt in other languange.
@ApeExample
@ApeExample 3 года назад
@@imrubbish8182 they're*
@jasatotakouzeno4674
@jasatotakouzeno4674 3 года назад
When’s part 2 (1942) coming? I wanna hear about the eventual takeover of luzon and the siege of corregidor, along with the policing action in the south
@cpgoef6
@cpgoef6 3 года назад
Soon!!
@lowkoalatee4033
@lowkoalatee4033 3 года назад
its out its called Surrender of the philippines 1942
@jrtiger34
@jrtiger34 3 года назад
In great detail thanks.
@martinjordan3994
@martinjordan3994 3 года назад
My grandparents had to live through the occupation (im half Filipino). My grandfather served with the army as some kind of clerical person and a gorilla fighter. He told me about getting shot in the knee and also about him taking 2 Japanese swords from fallen enemy. My grandmother told me about the Japanese cutting heads off people who didn’t bow to them when they passed them in the street. They were both of full of amazing/sad stories :(
@choleleng2916
@choleleng2916 3 года назад
😁😅 Gorilla fighter🦍 ✌️😅😆 It was guerrilla warfare
@xandergeorge7078
@xandergeorge7078 2 года назад
King Kong Ba ninuno Mo Lods?
@stoggafllik
@stoggafllik 2 года назад
I smell bullshit in your story
@KenKobayashiRasmussen
@KenKobayashiRasmussen Год назад
As a descendant of the Japanese, I am deeply saddened by the cruelty and horror that the imperial army forced upon your family and country...
@tomfrazier1103
@tomfrazier1103 3 года назад
I have a letter written by U.S. citizens whom resided in North Luzon and had visited California. They reached Manila harbor Nov. 11, 1941. The circuitous route on the return showed how tense everyone was "Waiting for something to happen".
@elchichosantana6410
@elchichosantana6410 3 года назад
Very informative. My grandpa fought on Bataan. He was captured by the Japanese and was part of Bataan Death March. My Grandpa was freed in 1943 but died after a week with my 3 yo dad.
@edgarbendanillo7929
@edgarbendanillo7929 3 года назад
It was the work of US why pilipinos suffer the war... For it was US Vs. Japanese, n not phillipines... That is we now suffer too... Ready ur history n apply it now ask n why..
@unknwn9418
@unknwn9418 3 года назад
@@edgarbendanillo7929 Japan wants to conquer Asia in the first place anyway
@unknwn9418
@unknwn9418 3 года назад
@@edgarbendanillo7929 It would've been worse for the Philippines if the U.S wasn't there
@user-mj8zf4qq7u
@user-mj8zf4qq7u 3 года назад
@@unknwn9418 I'd rather let Japan invade us and be a first class country today rather than being a 3rd world poor country with a bunch of corrupt and greedy government
@henie4
@henie4 3 года назад
@@user-mj8zf4qq7u Which countries Japan invaded on WWII that became a "first class country" today mostly because it was invaded by Japan? None. Japan didn't gain any new territories because they lost the war.
@PhillyPhanVinny
@PhillyPhanVinny 3 года назад
Cool video, I'm glad I was recommended it. I haven't heard of your channel before but am subbed now.
@rudolphparayo6034
@rudolphparayo6034 3 года назад
My dad was a Sergeant in the 1st Filipino Infantry Regiment. On October 20, 1944, he was wounded during the landing at Leyte. He was awarded the Purple Heart.
@Ks3N
@Ks3N 3 года назад
this needs more views, good job
@VisualizerPH
@VisualizerPH Год назад
Thanks for the video
@lancegigs9022
@lancegigs9022 3 года назад
you deserve a sub...... Great, heavily detailed video here.
@NickSchale
@NickSchale 3 года назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hADm2GsqtDE.html story continues soon!
@lancegigs9022
@lancegigs9022 3 года назад
@@NickSchale I've watched it already bro. thanks
@Zweiihandre
@Zweiihandre 3 года назад
My grandmother told me that they fled to the mountains as they said that the japanese are scared to go there , they said they climbed trees and dug bunkers just so they wouldn't be seen.
@Briarwood11
@Briarwood11 3 года назад
For outstanding primary reading about the loss of Clark Field, I recommend Wiulliam H. Bartsch's "December 8, 1941, MacArthur's Pearl Harbor" published by Texas A&M Press.
@nelsonian
@nelsonian 3 года назад
thx for the info. i have it on order from amazon.
@johnwaynecarlson5391
@johnwaynecarlson5391 3 года назад
It's a superb and underappreciated work.
@ginoongmaat2642
@ginoongmaat2642 6 месяцев назад
thank you for this documentary
@chrisleyba3665
@chrisleyba3665 3 года назад
Thank you for this Army University Press. I do have a question. All the literary resources I have on the Defense of the Philippines are based and mostly written here in the United States. Do you have any recommended literary resources from the Philippines' Military and Civilian historical counterparts that we could look into? I'd be curious to see how they documented the war and what their view point was reflecting on the conflict and events leading up to it. Again, thank you for this documentary!
@DanielLee_2304
@DanielLee_2304 2 года назад
Check "The Fateful Years: Japan's Adventure in the Philippines, 1941-1945" by Filipino historian Teodoro Agoncillo. The book of two volumes was published way back 1961. A timely book if you want to read on WWII in the Pacific and Philippines. Volume 1 discusses the entire defence of the country and the eventual fall of the country. Volume 2 discusses more on the cultural and daily life aspects of the Japanese conquest, along with the guerrillas still fighting, until the eventual liberation in 1944-1945.
@miahernandez5077
@miahernandez5077 3 года назад
my grandparents used to tell me stories of war when i was a child.. i hope we learn from our past.. we need to strengthen our army by training them more and providing latest ammunitions and artileries.. god bless our ww2 veterans.. may god keep them and may we all remember them.. proud pinoy here.. 🇵🇭
@SexLuthor
@SexLuthor 3 года назад
So you want latest artillery and powerful guns i dont think our country can afford that
@192OOIDJJ3
@192OOIDJJ3 Год назад
Love ❤️ and respect from 🇫🇲 Micronesia, my grandparents had to go through WW2 in their backyard too. Love my Philippino brothers and sisters. 🇵🇭
@phantomghost7595
@phantomghost7595 2 года назад
It's always nice to know about the history of our country. My grandparents was alive at the time of war, although I didn't have any chance to ask them about it because my grandfather died early before I was even born and my grandmother is living in another place and only has so much time when she visits.
@nerizasularte8429
@nerizasularte8429 3 года назад
I like this documentary, very clear and a lot of videos, new subscriber from the philippines!
@ArmyUniversityPress
@ArmyUniversityPress 3 года назад
Awesome, thank you!
@thekiwipinoguy
@thekiwipinoguy 3 года назад
Thank you for this very informative video.
@luigidisanpietro3720
@luigidisanpietro3720 3 года назад
*IT IS HEART, not ARMOR.* To see those young Filipino soldiers training with "metal tubes" and "cans" of Campbell's as pretend shell and artillery is woefully heartbreaking. For the Americans stationed in the East, it is understandable how they felt "abandoned." These men, they indeed carried on not because of experience nor materiel, but of "heart." Thank you Grand Uncle, for having fought with these "men of heart."
@valROFL
@valROFL 3 года назад
Marcos parin
@felipeball7778
@felipeball7778 3 года назад
Thats what kids do when its new year
@loganstrait7503
@loganstrait7503 2 года назад
US forces were abandoned in the Phillipines, British troops were abandoned in Singapore... each man gave his life for a greater good. I give a wholehearted salute to every Allied soldier on the Pacific front simply for the fact that I owe my existence, and my father in turn, and his father's life in turn to the sacrifice these men made to stemp the tide of Shinto Japanese expansion. My heart goes out to the Chinese brothers and sisters who suffered likewise, and continue to suffer under a woeful perversion of Communism, and as well to those Japanese soldiers and civillians who suffered the fate of fighting a misguided war whose consequences they did not understand and whose motives they were powerless to oppose... but the damnation of hell awaits each soldier who partook in the wholesale rape and slaughter of Roman proportions which took place in each and every Japanese conquest.
@uncanny3637
@uncanny3637 2 года назад
Ughh those cans you're talking about are new year noise makers, they are not for training.... Also the AFP train with real artillery.
@dr.francodebellefort4209
@dr.francodebellefort4209 Год назад
@@loganstrait7503 Lies!
@patrickwentz8413
@patrickwentz8413 3 года назад
that was excellent.
@elprincep582
@elprincep582 3 года назад
I remember my grandmother who told stories that during world war 2 in Vigan where she lived on the outskirts of the city, she being in her 20s they hid in a dugged area in "Naglemmengan" located in the mountains to hide from the japanese and bombings. It was a dramatic escape knowing that my abuela suffered much during the war. She noted also that the Japanese soldiers she met were kind.
@KenKobayashiRasmussen
@KenKobayashiRasmussen Год назад
As a Japanese descendant I am deeply saddened by the horrors and cruelty that was forced upon your family by the imperial army...
@ginochristiano1397
@ginochristiano1397 3 года назад
Not a very well known story, but MacArthur's escape from Manila to Australia was pretty epic. They escaped Corregidor at night in patrol boats all the way to Northern Mindanao while Japanese scout planes searched for them. They rode a plane for Australia from an plantation airfield in Bukidnon, just kilometers from Japanese -occupied Davao
@stephenkalatucka6213
@stephenkalatucka6213 Год назад
About 25,000 American soldiers would have loved such an epic journey, but hey! The death march was fun.
@user-ed8wc1yr8s
@user-ed8wc1yr8s Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1js16n6IwY4.html リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。 The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world. America is, Concentration camp for Japanese immigrants robbed and confiscated property same as nazi
@TU-ESSTULTUS
@TU-ESSTULTUS 9 месяцев назад
That wasn't epic at all though Do you think that abandoning over 25,000 Filipino and American Soldiers to die brutal deaths under the Japanese, was, in any way, "epic"?
@hushpuppy1735
@hushpuppy1735 3 года назад
This is gonna be epic
@50buttfish
@50buttfish 3 года назад
My FIL was a Filipino guerilla fighter, I never got to meet him, but heard stories from his older children. He was basically a headhunter, taking many, many Japanese lives.
@JeeJeanVittoVlogs
@JeeJeanVittoVlogs 2 года назад
Very informative. Thank you for sharing.
@anjohadid
@anjohadid 3 месяца назад
Thank you for the info. ❤️
@mps28
@mps28 3 года назад
Wow Amazing documentary!👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@randomguy-ss8iq
@randomguy-ss8iq 3 года назад
3:44 Jones bridge ❤️
@augustreigns9716
@augustreigns9716 3 года назад
very well presented.
@josephramirbacea4243
@josephramirbacea4243 3 года назад
My Grandpa Gonzalo Bacea was a WW2 Philippine veteran...He never stop reminding us to not allow War to happen again. No sides really wins. Death and suffering for both are terrible..!!!
@KaMil-gw2qr
@KaMil-gw2qr 3 года назад
A lot of good men and women were lost on each front in the war, from the east to the west, each sacrifice was unique, but the pacific was a whole other beast. Imagine the Japanese actually had the production capacity to keep up with us or enjoy the same resource/food security.
@corcaighrebel
@corcaighrebel 2 года назад
This is really interesting, with some excellent footage.
@MagicGladiatorMandrake
@MagicGladiatorMandrake 3 года назад
Tnx to Cory Reign she Re-Write Most of Philippines History to make them a Hero and remove most important detail in our history.
@mrjackbilbo
@mrjackbilbo 3 года назад
Re-wrote
@Ramdom_vidios
@Ramdom_vidios 3 года назад
Re wrote
@recielynreataza8934
@recielynreataza8934 3 года назад
Hahahahaha
@xxxocampo7215
@xxxocampo7215 3 года назад
What particular in our history did she revised?
@akupinini3214
@akupinini3214 3 года назад
QAnon, pinoy version
@dsfdggsdgdfdfhhdfhhdhd
@dsfdggsdgdfdfhhdfhhdhd 3 года назад
Wow. I really liked this. Since this is where my great grandfather fought. He was a Private First Class. He was in the 51st Infantry division.
@cumgoat
@cumgoat 3 года назад
I would like to know more about how japanese beach landings were conducted and what kind of resistance they faced
@davidgiacomini9250
@davidgiacomini9250 3 года назад
While not completely authoritative, a really neat period work on that topic is ONI 225-J "Japanese Landing Operations And Equipment". This is an official U.S. Navy study written in May 1943. It has general breakdowns of Japanese landing tactics gained from captured documents and prisoner interrogations. There are also neat photos and diagrams of Japanese landing craft and other weapons. You can view the manual online here: docdro.id/eELo1bJ
@Jupiter.141
@Jupiter.141 3 года назад
They all landed without any resistance, if you're actually paying attention to the video, McArthur moved up the entire defenses in bataan, defending every shorelines is way too impossible to cover because of logistics and manpower.
@adrianbeslada6474
@adrianbeslada6474 Год назад
Wow nice do you have new post about Philippines military update 😊
@jennypai1776
@jennypai1776 3 года назад
Hope you can make something similar with the Battle for Manila 1945. Pretty much forgotten
@josircavalcanti8764
@josircavalcanti8764 3 года назад
Pequeno detalhe: os filipinos vinham lutando, há anos, pela independência, primeiro contra a Espanha, depois, contra os Estados Unidos. A guerra lhes deu a oportunidade que aproveitaram integralmente
@jhinkhadavirtuoso5221
@jhinkhadavirtuoso5221 3 года назад
the guy who commented on the live chat is the world's savior
@mohammedsaysrashid3587
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 3 года назад
Excellent history Video clearly explaining of events
@t0t0yL11T
@t0t0yL11T 3 года назад
This is very educational.
@pjreynoldsa1
@pjreynoldsa1 3 года назад
I am an American living in Manila. I have 23 uncles, and cousins who's names are engraved in the alabaster walls of the American Cemetery at Fort Bonifacio, all died defending the Philippines, all in unmarked graves as their bodies were ripped to shreds and made unidentifiable by the Japanese. I refuse to own a Japanese car to this day, and I love my 2nd home the Philippines. I wish I wasn't looked at with so much disdain as yet another Weestern here to take advantage, and to be taken advantage of.
@goldy3802
@goldy3802 3 года назад
That's very sad sir... Please accept my deepest respect and thanks for your family who died fighting for the country. Those people will pay for their lack of respect :)
@KenKobayashiRasmussen
@KenKobayashiRasmussen Год назад
As a descendant of Japanese please accept my deepest condolences and respect to your family members lost in the war. I am deeply saddened by the horror that was forced upon your family and country. I want to give you a different perspective of the war from a Japanese family. The Japanese soldiers fighting for the imperial army thought that their emperor was a true living God. God was ordering them to take arms, they had no choice. Many did not want to go to war, they didn't even know what they were fighting for. My mother lost her Uncle, and Cousin as they offered their lives as Kamikaze pilots. My grandfather my mother's father was forced to fight in Russia, where he experienced all kind of horrors and came back to Japan as a different traumatized person. I am in no shape of form trying to excuse the horrors and atrocities committed by the imperial army of Japan, but I want to make you understand that this War was forced upon the regular Japanese people by the government, and even the Emperor was lied too, this imperial battle structure was taught by the Americans and the British. Everyone is loser in War, it brings out the most horrible of the most gentle people. We are all capable of fighting and making the enemy less human in mind, that is the only way we can accept killing another human.
@donwade_
@donwade_ 3 года назад
My great grandfathers brother fought in the Philippines in the us army 🇺🇸
@vomesaupa7229
@vomesaupa7229 3 года назад
1905
@damanithegoat9653
@damanithegoat9653 3 года назад
@@vomesaupa7229 what ?
@vomesaupa7229
@vomesaupa7229 3 года назад
@@damanithegoat9653 Philippine-American War 1899
@rad6931
@rad6931 3 года назад
@@vomesaupa7229 that's ww2 1941-1945
@vomesaupa7229
@vomesaupa7229 3 года назад
@@rad6931 Not much talked about, but many people were killed in this war
@thepunisher4167
@thepunisher4167 3 года назад
Well done documentary. I've learned a lot. Air superiority is a important asset in times of war. If they had equipped USAFFE during that time it will change the tide of war. Apparently, the Japanese forces will gain lost to conquer East Indies. Great video.
@houraisanproductions5879
@houraisanproductions5879 3 года назад
Japan: Attack on Pearl Harbour Philippines: Invasion at the comment section of literally every video that mentions them. EDIT: I changed Attack to Invasion
@ryryken11
@ryryken11 3 года назад
That’s kinda offensive
@renatotorrejos5641
@renatotorrejos5641 3 года назад
only u perhaps are attacking the comment section,, but thos of us learning from the past are delightend by this video
@theavocadoscientist7979
@theavocadoscientist7979 3 года назад
@@ryryken11 actually I as a Filipino, can confirm
@albertchan8798
@albertchan8798 3 года назад
@@ryryken11 no he's right we come into the comment section of every video that mentions us
@houraisanproductions5879
@houraisanproductions5879 3 года назад
@@ryryken11 bruh I'm literally filipino and my comment wasn't intended to offend anyone.
@josephemmanuelpatotoy2431
@josephemmanuelpatotoy2431 3 года назад
I rather watch video's like this nor learning from school
@EDOSANTX
@EDOSANTX 3 года назад
My father is from Tayug, he about 9 years old and witnessed the cavalry troopers. They made a temporary HQ by an acacia tree close to the church . He heard an artillery or AT gun firing almost all day across agno river while the troopers withdraw through his town
@johnwales4214
@johnwales4214 3 года назад
I'm glad that he survived the war.
@jievellar
@jievellar 8 месяцев назад
New subscriber here❤
@jimbomenace4778
@jimbomenace4778 3 года назад
FANtastic! Just fantastic.
@sta5011
@sta5011 3 года назад
Bruh im learning more stuff with these documentaries than in our sschools lol (thanks foreign media for covering some stuff up BTW!)
@michaelcombs24
@michaelcombs24 3 года назад
My father and his eldest brother were there to help take it back from the Japanese. Dad assigned to the Marines, as a Corpsman, uncle Bob, on a Destroyer, Gunner Mate, Guns
@jkdm7653
@jkdm7653 3 года назад
Is our narrator saying "cavalry", or "calvary"? Good production anyway...thanks!
@schoolssection
@schoolssection 3 года назад
I just cringe each time I hear' 'calvary'.
@gsr4535
@gsr4535 3 года назад
This is very good! Educational and interesting. Thanks!
@COUNTVLAIDMIR
@COUNTVLAIDMIR 3 года назад
The BG music sounds it could be in an Ace Combat game.
@theodoreolson8529
@theodoreolson8529 3 года назад
"Dugout Doug" was no hero. His "defense" of the Philippines was shameful. His insistence on retaking the country instead of bypassing and blockading it had more to do with nurturing his wounded ego than any strategic importance to the war. The fact that he had some 200 staff dedicated to public relations had a lot to do with his legacy. There are many legendary exploits of military leadership from world war two. Gen MacArthur in my book doesn't rate his legacy.
@jackdelacruz1482
@jackdelacruz1482 3 года назад
Agree. Japan would've surrendered even without losing the Philippines. His ego caused the destruction of the most beautiful city in Southeast Asia, Manila (300 years of Spanish+Chinese+Native+US development). Worse, he intentionally razed the city cause he couldnt' siege it properly.
@madwolf0966
@madwolf0966 3 года назад
He really should've gone for Formosa and cut the Empire in half :/
@muhammadzakuanmusa2696
@muhammadzakuanmusa2696 3 года назад
Yeah, Tells that to the Filipinos, they will disagree with you.
@1911Zoey
@1911Zoey 3 года назад
Not to mention, the same MacArthur suggested to nuke China during the Korean War a few years after. Lol His insubordination cost him his position and was relieved from duty.
@theodoreolson8529
@theodoreolson8529 3 года назад
Muhammad Zakuan Musa I think many Filipinos feel the destruction of Manila would have been far less had the US simply bypassed the country.
@piekwonie6518
@piekwonie6518 3 года назад
I read Robert Ludlum's The Rhinemann Exchange, the story was also about the Pacific War.
@surfstrat59
@surfstrat59 3 года назад
Initiative and momentum count for much on the battlefield.
@kickassssnation027
@kickassssnation027 3 года назад
When FDR issued that embargo, they should have prepared earlier against the japanese invading force. Instead of beaches, dugouts and trenches should have been in the capital and the invasion of Lingayen gulf should have been met with guerilla tactics in the mountains. The generals and the pencil pushers in Congress also had the lack of foresight that the Japanese WILL retaliate with such a move.
@Lawofimprobability
@Lawofimprobability 3 года назад
The existing plan was a mobile defense if possible, retreat to hold out in Bataan until relief if needed, and a last ditch hold-out in the heavily defended island of Corrigidor. Most economically literate leaders would not invade due to an embargo. Japan's leaders were anomalously uninterested in trade and logistics.
@silverhawkscape2677
@silverhawkscape2677 3 года назад
@@Lawofimprobability In short, they were prepared for a rational enemy. Not the savages that were the Japanese army.
@CesarMartinez-oc4xm
@CesarMartinez-oc4xm 2 года назад
What i cant understand why the air forces based in the Philippines were still caught in their hangars kniwi g that Pearl Harbor was already attcked. They should have already attackwd Formisa which is wirhin the range of their bombers and fighters.
@kickassssnation027
@kickassssnation027 2 года назад
@@silverhawkscape2677 the problem with that idea was that the Japanese not only had the propensity to attack despite the embargo, they had to pillage China, which means they had the gumption even with the embargo, to carry out their ambitions. This did not go through heads of US politicians at all.
@stoggafllik
@stoggafllik 2 года назад
@@kickassssnation027 lol it did. The US leadership simply wanted to start the war so they could have an excuse to enter against Germany.
@Jalu3
@Jalu3 3 года назад
The video abruptly ends after Manila was declared a Open City, and fast forward to the surrender in Mid '42. It avoids the fighting retreat into the Bataan Peninsula, the months of siege, the quick fall of the peninsula after determined defense in April '42. And the difficult decision of Wainwright to surrender all of USAFFE after the landing of Japanese forces on Corregidor.
@ArmyUniversityPress
@ArmyUniversityPress 3 года назад
Our next film will discuss the Fall of the Philippines. Stay tuned!
@davidamador655
@davidamador655 3 года назад
​@@ArmyUniversityPress Cant wait! Wonderful content.
@Jalu3
@Jalu3 3 года назад
@@ArmyUniversityPress I hope that is followed up with an intense documentary of the guerrilla resistance, the plight of POWs, civilian internees, and the citizens of the United States' Commonwealth of the Philippines, and the efforts to provide support from the Allies via submarine operations.
@earthenjadis8199
@earthenjadis8199 3 года назад
@@Jalu3 This is not a socio-political RU-vid channel that will cover these things. This covers actual battles and what lessons can be learned from those battles for the soldiers of today.
@anti-loganpaul7827
@anti-loganpaul7827 3 года назад
@@Jalu3 This channel covers actual conventional battles though.
@bobdhoodzpulisingvlogger6655
@bobdhoodzpulisingvlogger6655 3 года назад
Nice Video Sir
@user-kb3hp2qu8k
@user-kb3hp2qu8k 2 года назад
Thanks.
@oppaisan7966
@oppaisan7966 3 года назад
my grandfather told us his experience that the world war 2 was a massacre war but he also told us that not all the japanese wanted to be in a war one of the japanese captain protected my grandfathers family the japanese told my grandfather that ''he also has a family to protect while i am here can i protect your family as my family'' and that captain's GrandDaughter is now my girlfriend the lesson on what my grandfather said is not everyone who are in a war or invading one country are all bad they are just being forced to do so
@KenKobayashiRasmussen
@KenKobayashiRasmussen Год назад
This mindset is straight from the heart, if more people was able to think this way, the world would be a better place to live in. As a Japanese descendant I deeply saddened and sorry to hear the destruction and horror the imperial army forced upon your beautiful people and country.
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